Career Summary

MLB Statistics

Historical (past-seasons) WARP is now based on DRA..
cFIP and DRA are not available on a by-team basis and display as zeroes(0). See TOT line for season totals of these stats.Multiple stints are are currently shown —Click to hide.

YEAR

Team

Lg

G

GS

IP

W

L

SV

H

BB

SO

HR

oppTAv

PPF

H/9

BB/9

HR/9

K/9

GB%

BABIP

TAv

WHIP

FIP

ERA

cFIP

DRA

DRA-

WARP

1975

NYA

MLB

10

1

15.7

0

1

0

15

9

15

0

.264

95

8.6

5.2

0.0

8.6

34%

.341

.270

1.53

2.56

3.45

100

5.69

124.2

-0.2

1976

NYA

MLB

7

0

16.0

0

0

0

20

4

12

1

.261

93

11.2

2.2

0.6

6.8

50%

.345

.308

1.50

2.68

5.62

92

3.52

97.8

0.2

1977

NYA

MLB

31

25

210.7

16

7

1

174

65

176

12

.260

97

7.4

2.8

0.5

7.5

45%

.271

.221

1.13

2.74

2.82

73

2.82

77.2

5.6

1978

NYA

MLB

35

35

273.7

25

3

0

187

72

248

13

.262

95

6.1

2.4

0.4

8.2

51%

.241

.200

0.95

2.16

1.74

51

1.84

63.3

9.7

1979

NYA

MLB

33

30

236.3

18

8

2

203

71

201

20

.263

96

7.7

2.7

0.8

7.7

51%

.280

.235

1.16

3.06

2.78

60

2.29

68.6

7.7

1980

NYA

MLB

37

29

219.7

17

10

1

215

80

166

19

.260

96

8.8

3.3

0.8

6.8

47%

.296

.267

1.34

3.48

3.56

84

3.31

87.0

4.2

1981

NYA

MLB

23

21

127.0

11

5

0

100

26

104

12

.266

94

7.1

1.8

0.9

7.4

46%

.249

.222

0.99

2.77

2.76

57

1.87

72.9

4.4

1982

NYA

MLB

34

33

222.0

14

8

0

216

69

162

22

.265

98

8.8

2.8

0.9

6.6

41%

.285

.257

1.28

3.46

3.81

87

3.18

84.7

4.9

1983

NYA

MLB

31

31

250.3

21

9

0

232

60

156

26

.265

96

8.3

2.2

0.9

5.6

45%

.264

.251

1.17

3.67

3.42

89

3.10

84.2

5.9

1984

NYA

MLB

29

28

195.7

10

11

0

223

44

127

24

.261

94

10.3

2.0

1.1

5.8

41%

.309

.289

1.36

3.75

4.51

93

4.35

108.5

1.6

1985

NYA

MLB

34

33

259.0

22

6

0

243

42

143

28

.265

97

8.4

1.5

1.0

5.0

45%

.262

.240

1.10

3.53

3.27

86

2.73

80.9

7.6

1986

NYA

MLB

30

30

192.3

9

12

0

202

38

140

28

.263

101

9.5

1.8

1.3

6.6

49%

.289

.263

1.25

3.84

3.98

79

2.96

85.3

5.3

1987

NYA

MLB

22

17

117.7

5

8

0

111

38

96

14

.264

98

8.5

2.9

1.1

7.3

36%

.282

.251

1.27

3.78

3.67

92

3.72

87.2

2.6

1988

NYA

MLB

12

10

56.0

2

3

0

57

15

32

7

.260

98

9.2

2.4

1.1

5.1

34%

.273

.282

1.29

4.21

4.18

95

3.93

102.3

0.7

Career

MLB

368

323

2392.0

170

91

4

2198

633

1778

226

.263

97

8.3

2.4

0.9

6.7

45%

.276

.246

1.18

3.28

3.29

78

2.93

82.0

60.2

Statistics for All Levels

'opp' stats - Quality of opponents faced - have been moved and are available only as OPP_QUAL in the Statistics reports now.Minor league stats are currently shown —Click to hide.

BP Chats

Hey Mike what were your too 5 batting stances to imitate on the sand lot when you were a kid? You do the Julio Franco? The Andre Dawson straight leg? The Youkilis slide? The Craig counsel tower?...what should the kids be imitating from today's game?(Classberg from Chicago)

I was a pitching guy when I was a kid. I loved emulating Fernando's crazy windup, Ron Guidry, and Tom Seaver. (Mike Gianella)

Steven--have you ever given thought to whom would comprise a Platonic ideal pitching rotation? Lots of guys are textbook #1s--Koufax, Maddux, Big Train, Bob Gibson, et al, but what about the rest? Is there such a thing as a quintessential #2? When you think of a #4 or a #5, who is it?(Jape from Portland)

It's fun to make lists and such, but this one is so wide open. Are we talking career or single season? If the latter, I would have guys like Ron Guidry '78 and Dwight Gooden '85 and other names that don't make the list of all-time greats. If we're talking about guys who were more than one-hit wonders, my list starts with Pedro Martinez and Lefty Grove. (Steven Goldman)

Seriously, what is going on with the Yankee decision makers and their ability to develop pitching? You'd think Kennedy's success elsewhere plus how Joba and Hughes turned out would be instructive.(Rob Gee from Philly)

It's not something they've done within living memory for most people, so they get nervous and paranoid about how to handle young players. Under the Steinbrenner family ownership, they've gotten Ron Guidry, Andy Pettitte, Dave Righetti... It's not a long list, so they're inexperienced. (Steven Goldman)

Would you rather have a Ron Guidry type career, short with multiple Cy Young caliber years, or Jamie Moyer, okay to good for a long, long time? (redsoxin2004 from Columbia, CT)

Me, I'd rather have the Moyer path, because I think that if I had the talent to play in the majors I would hang on as long as I can and wring every last drop out of my ability. That, plus I've always enjoyed the elder statesman role in certain situations. (Jay Jaffe)